SAINT
DOMINIC'S PROPHECY,
Taken from the Book, The
Sign of Her Heart
by John M. Haffert
SEVERAL TIMES we
have suggested that the reader might be surprised at the great emphasis given
to a devotion as apparently simple as the Brown
Scapular. But one of the most interesting testimonies to the importance of the
Scapular devotion today has so far been scarcely mentioned.
In the pages of an
ancient history of the Carmelite Order (written in mediaeval Latin by a
forgotten writer named Ventimiglia) the author of
this book found the following account:
Three famous men of
God met on a street corner in
At their chance
meeting, by the light of the Holy Spirit each of the three men recognized each
other and, in the course of their conversation (as recorded by various
followers who were present), they made prophecies to each other. Saint
Angelus foretold the stigmata of Saint Francis, and Saint Dominic said:
"One day,
Brother Angelus, to your Order of Carmel the Most Blessed Virgin Mary will give
a devotion to be known as the Brown Scapular, and to my Order of Preachers she
will give a devotion to be known as the Rosary. ONE DAY, THROUGH THE ROSARY AND
THE SCAPULAR, SHE WILL SAVE THE WORLD."
Since he was
gathering material for a book on the Scapular Devotion, the present writer was
deeply impressed on finding this story in Ventimiglia's
History . . . and he was especially impressed by the prophecy of St. Dominic.
Yet that prophecy
appears nowhere in the past sixteen chapters which (with the exception of
Chapter Fifteen and a few paragraphs referring to Fatima) were for thirteen
years the total of this book . . . unchanged through several printings totaling
more than 70,000 copies.
St. Dominic's
"prophecy" was omitted repeatedly, through all those printings and years,
despite the fact that the author came later to know that today a Chapel, on
that very street comer in Rome, commemorates the meeting of St. Dominic, St. Francis
of Assisi, and St. Angelus as described by Ventimiglia.
Therefore, why the
omission?
Why were not the
words "Through the Rosary and the Scapular She will save the world"
blazoned across the pages and even perhaps included in the title of this book?
There are two reasons.
First, the writer
was not sure that Ventimiglia was a reliable
historian.
But that would not
have been sufficient reason to omit any reference whatever to a story of such
importance. The second and graver reason is that, even though he was himself
convinced that the Scapular Devotion is important, the writer was by no means
convinced that the Scapular could be one of two instruments to SAVE THE WORLD.
He did not believe that the Scapular, or any sacramental, could be that important.
Thus in the year of
Our Lord 1940, Mary in Her Scapular Promise was published without the
"finding" in Ventimiglia's history
mentioned. And it was omitted through one reprinting after another.
In 1941, following
the first success of the book, the author told the story of how it had all come
about in a sequel titled From a Morning Prayer.
This second book
told how a saintly Carmelite lay-brother, after what he thought was a vision,
commissioned the author to make the Scapular devotion better known, and
especially the practice of using the Scapular while making the
Morning Offering (to emphasize the offering through the Immaculate Heart of Mary).
. . carrying the offering through the day, in all our sacrifices, thoughts and
deeds . . . walking always under the mantle of Mary and thus doing
all, as She did on earth, for God and for the Reign of Christ in all hearts.
A few months after
this second book was published Archbishop Finbar
Ryan, of Trinidad, wrote a letter to the writer, congratulating him, and
adding: "While I congratulate you on this book, From a Morning Prayer, I
cannot help wondering why you have made no mention of OUR LADY OF FATIMA . . .
since in the last apparition at Fatima Our Lady held the Brown Scapular in Her
hands."
The author, like
most people in the
It happened that
Archbishop Ryan had written the first book in the English language on the
Therein . . . for
the first time . . . the author read of Our Lady's words at Fatima: "Only
the Blessed Virgin can save you" . . . and of Her final appearances during
the miracle of the sun: First, dressed in white and holding the Rosary, while
Saint Joseph, holding the Infant, stood at Her side; second, dressed in blue,
while Our Lord appeared at Her side; third and finally, dressed in the brown of
Carmel, holding the Brown Scapular in Her hands . . . while Our Lord, Who had
not changed from the second apparition, slowly raised His hand and blessed the
great crowd in the Cova below.
With feelings he can
hardly describe the author realized that, at
Although the
previous chapter . . . and, indeed, most of this book . . . was completed in
1939, before the author had heard about Fatima, it would seem actually to have
been based on the
Perhaps the
explanation of this, as well as of many other events which have contributed to
a sudden "bursting forth" of the Fatima Apostolate all over the world
in this second half of the twentieth century, will be found solely in the
designs and powers of Our Lady Herself.
If only the Blessed
Virgin can save the world today, naturally it is because God wills that we
establish the Reign of Christ only through Mary.
And for that reason
her two most privileged, most indulgenced, most universal, most ancient and
most valued sacramentals . . . the Rosary and the Brown Scapular . . . assume a
greater importance than ever before in history.
The strongest
evidence of this cannot be measured in words confirmed by footnotes and
references. It is confirmed by the action of Our Lady in the world, now, all
about us. Each one has the evidence he sees daily in many
conversions and in the apostolates of the hour.
In 1940, following
the first publication of this book, the V. Rev. Gabriel N. Pausbach,
Assistant General of the Carmelite Order, founded a Scapular Apostolate at the
East 29th Street
Within three years,
the morning offering dictated by the lay-brother (as described in From a
Morning Prayer, Prayer") was printed three million times. Year after year,
month after month, the devotion of the Scapular began to flourish more and more
throughout the
Although the
children of Fatima had said, in 1917, that Our Lady appeared in the final
vision with the Scapular (as Archbishop Ryan published in his book, Our Lady of
Fatima), attention of early writers focused rather on the prophecies of Our
Lady of Fatima, on authenticity of the apparitions, on the miracle of the sun,
cures at Fatima, etc. . . . and very little
authoritative work was done on the meaning of the message, particularly as
regarded the multiple apparitions on the day of the miracle of the sun.
In 1946, in an
interview lasting several hours, the present writer asked "Lucia,"
sole survivor of the three children who saw Our Lady of Fatima, about that last
apparition on October 13 of Our Lady of the Scapular.
She confirmed what
Archbishop Ryan and a few other early writers on the subject had said. But we
found, especially among some of the "authorities" on Fatima in the
It was in an
interview which two Carmelite Fathers had with "Lucia," who had herself
become a Carmelite nun with the name, Sister Mary of the Immaculate Heart, in
the Carmel of Coimbra, Portugal. The interrogator in the interview was
the V. Rev. Howard Rafferty, O. Carm., Provincial
Director of the Third Order Secular of the
"Oh, they are
wrong!" Lucia exclaimed Shortly after the
apparitions in 1917, Lucia told interrogators that the vision of Our Lady of
the Scapular on October 17, "Looked just like the picture of Our Lady of
Mount Carmel in the parish
church."
The picture is the
very old, universally-used portrayal of Our Lady in the Carmelite Habit, with
the Infant Jesus holding the little Scapular in His Hands and Angels descending
into Purgatory . . . apparently at Our Lady's bidding .
.
. freeing Souls from the flames. From an explanation
which Lucia gave to the present writer in 1946 it is apparent that reference in
1917 to this picture referred only to the Habit and general appearance of Our
Lady. In the
vision Our Lady Herself held the Scapular in Her hands and, instead of the Infant
in Her arms, Our Lord stood at Her side, in the
fullness of manhood, blessing the crowd below.
"Why do you
think Our Lady appeared with the Scapular in this last vision?" Lucia was
asked in 1950.
"Because,"
Lucia replied, "She wants everyone to wear the Scapular."
One
In
Therefore they sent a petition to the Bishop of Fatima, asking His Excellency
to settle this matter once and for all. They wrote: "On this question we
cannot have a sufficient and practical certainty unless through the
intervention of
In the July, 1953,
issue of the VOICE OF FATIMA, published as the official voice of the Bishop of
Fatima, simultaneously in five languages, on the front page, in bold type, the
Bishop of Fatima gave a detailed answer. It is only fitting that that answer,
in its entirety, be quoted here because . . . in the first definitive statement
on this subject by the Bishop of Fatima . . . His Excellency pierced the three
most controversial points of the Scapular Devotion:
STATEMENT OF THE
BISHOP OF
(I)
Substitution of a medal for the Scapular. This was authorized by a decree of the Holy Office, December 16, 1910.
According to this decree "in wearing the medal one participates, as with
the Scapular proper, in all the Indulgences and
in all the privileges, not excepting that called the Sabbatine
Privilege of the Scapular of Mount Carmel."
But the same decree
begins with the following words: "As the holy Scapular contributes
efficaciously to the progress of the spiritual life among the faithful and is
in great favor amongst them, the Holy Father desires that the habitual form be
maintained." (Act. Ap. Sedis, III, 22.)
Therefore, the use
of the medal instead of the Scapular is permitted. But it was the wish of
Blessed Pius X, who granted the permission, and of the Pontiffs who succeeded
him, that preference should be given to the use of the Scapular. Our Lady's
wishes cannot be different from the wishes of the Vicar of Her Son.
Try then to use the
Scapular (even with the medal as many people do in
(II) The Scapular of
His Holiness Pope
Pius XII, happily reigning, in a letter which he wrote to the Generals of the
Carmelite Order, on the occasion of the seventh centenary of the Scapular of
Mount Carmel on February 11, 1950, said explicitly that we should all recognize
that the Scapular is the sign of our "consecration to the most holy Heart
of the Immaculate Virgin." His Holiness on this occasion is most certainly
referring to the Scapular of Mount Carmel and to no other. The Blue Army then
was right in choosing, proposing and propagating the Scapular of Carmel------and
not one of the many others which exist in the Church------as a sign of the
consecration of its members to the Immaculate Heart of Mary.
(III) The Apparition
of Our Lady of
one of the points of Her message, as a very
efficacious means of salvation of souls and of the world.
The "Blue
Army," which we mentioned above, and to which the Bishop of Fatima refers
in his statement on the Scapular, has caused millions of people, all over the
world, to promise to wear the Scapular always as their sign of consecration to
the Immaculate Heart of Mary. The "pledge" used by the Blue Army was
first used in a "March of Pledges" which the present author
inaugurated in the Scapular Apostolate in
Even as the
"March of Pledges" was beginning (netting one and three-quarter million
pledges in the United States in twelve months), Our Lady Herself was "founding"
the Blue Army elsewhere in America . . . the Army which would, by the use of
the Rosary and Scapular and fulfillment of daily duty . . . extend Her power
over the earth even into the very heart of the Communist empire.
It began in the last
weeks of 1946 when a devout priest, worn by years of intense labor in the
Lord's Vineyard, was dying of a serious heart ailment. Five heart specialists
had decided that he had but a few months to live.
In this extremity,
the good priest . . . Father Harold V. Colgan, of
Saint Mary's Church, in
promoters of Our Lady's Sodality among the secular clergy in
And he was cured. At
once he began to do three things in his parish: He resolved that not one of his
parishioners would die without the Scapular. He strove to establish the daily
Rosary in every home. And he asked everyone in his parish to thus form for Our
Lady, by their devotion and above all by their good daily lives, a small Marian
army against the red armies of Communism. He asked them to wear some little outward
sign of blue as a token that they had pledged themselves to this . . . that
they were saying the Rosary, wearing the Scapular, and offering up their daily
duties in a spirit of reparation for the sins of the world.
The number of daily
Communions in the parish doubled in one year. Masses on the first Saturday
filled the Church (which seats 1,000) to capacity.
Everyone in
the parish could see and could feel the spiritual light this Marian devotion
had brought to them. They could see it above all in the greatly increased
number of people at the Communion rail.
Other pastors in the
area heard of it and took up the idea of the "Blue Army." And
coincidentally there was a growing friendship between the author of this book
and Father Colgan while the idea of the Blue Army . .
. as though by magic
. . . began to spread far and wide. . . .
Within three years
the Blue Army leaped to over two million signed members in the
. . . "One day,
through the Rosary and the Scapular, She will save the world," Saint
Dominic is reported to have said.
And whether the
Saint did actually speak those words seven hundred years ago or not, they were
recorded in a book at least more than two centuries ago. And from the skies of
Fatima Our Blessed Mother today holds down to us . . . the Rosary and the
Scapular . . . with the promise of great conversions and of world peace.
BLUE ARMY PLEDGE TO
OUR LADY
DEAREST Queen-Mother,
who didst appear at Fatima and promise on three conditions to convert Russia
and bring peace to all mankind, I hereby solemnly pledge to Thine
lmmaculate Heart that in reparation for the sins Thou
didst so sorrowfully lament, I shall offer up each day the sacrifices necessary
for fulfillment of daily duty; I shall say a part of the Rosary each day while
pondering the mysteries; I shall wear the Scapular as profession of this pledge
and as an act of consecration to Thee. I also promise to renew this pledge
especially in moments of temptation.
THIS PLEDGE IS NOT A
VOW AND DOES NOT BIND UNDER SIN.